Police arrested Javier Da Silva, of Queens, New York, who police said is accused of using the ATM card that belonged to Valerie Reyes, a 24-year-old New Rochelle, New York woman whose body was found last Tuesday along Glenville Road. Greenwich police did not have details on what Da Silva has been charged with.

Greenwich police held a news conference on Tuesday afternoon about the investigation, which included the use of Reyes’ ATM card and transactions they suspect happened after her death.

“There’s been an intense focus on the use of Valerie’s ATM card after which we believe she was murdered,” Captain Robert Berry, of the Greenwich Police Department, said during the news conference Tuesday afternoon.

The arrest of Da Silva comes after police examined several crime scenes and hundreds of hours of surveillance footage and interviewed several potential witnesses, police said. They also analyzed social media footprints and records.

“We’re hopeful and confident that the pursuit of justice for Valerie will be successful and hope this investigation provides some level of closure to the Reyes family,” Berry said.

No additional arrests have been made and police said the investigation is not over yet.

Norma Sanchez, Reyes' mother, said her daughter was a vibrant, friendly person who struggled with mental illness, including anxiety and depression. Just days ago, Val told her mom she was panicking, fearful someone was going to hurt her and went to the city. This had happened before and Val’s family was hopeful she was seeking psychological help.

“Val was pretty much looking for help. To help herself. Valerie, it would have been an easy way out for her to just do something to harm herself but she was strong enough to just leave and seek help in the city. We were hoping. We were hoping she was seeking therapy," Sanchez said.

Sanchez said that her daughter took bed sheets and towels from her New Rochelle apartment and went into the city. Her family believes she probably used the linens to stay at a hotel.